3,294 research outputs found
Rerandomization to improve covariate balance in experiments
Randomized experiments are the "gold standard" for estimating causal effects,
yet often in practice, chance imbalances exist in covariate distributions
between treatment groups. If covariate data are available before units are
exposed to treatments, these chance imbalances can be mitigated by first
checking covariate balance before the physical experiment takes place. Provided
a precise definition of imbalance has been specified in advance, unbalanced
randomizations can be discarded, followed by a rerandomization, and this
process can continue until a randomization yielding balance according to the
definition is achieved. By improving covariate balance, rerandomization
provides more precise and trustworthy estimates of treatment effects.Comment: Published in at http://dx.doi.org/10.1214/12-AOS1008 the Annals of
Statistics (http://www.imstat.org/aos/) by the Institute of Mathematical
Statistics (http://www.imstat.org
A methodology for small scale rural land use mapping in semi-arid developing countries using orbital imagery. 2: Capabilities of remote sensing techniques for land use surveys
There are no author-identified significant results in this report
A methodology for small scale rural land use mapping in semi-arid developing countries using orbital imagery. Part 6: A low-cost method for land use mapping using simple visual techniques of interpretation
The author has identified the following significant results. It was found that color composite transparencies and monocular magnification provided the best base for land use interpretation. New methods for determining optimum sample sizes and analyzing interpretation accuracy levels were developed. All stages of the methodology were assessed, in the operational sense, during the production of a 1:250,000 rural land use map of Murcia Province, Southeast Spain
A methodology for small scale rural land use mapping in semi-arid developing countries using orbital imagery. Part 3: Review of land use surveys using orbital imagery in the USA
The author has identified the following significant results. Techniques of preprocessing, interpretation, classification, and ground truth sampling were studied. It has shown the need for a low cost, low level technology, viable, operational methodology to replace the emphasis given in the U.S. to machine processing, which many developing countries cannot afford, understand, nor implement
A methodology for small scale rural land use mapping in semi-arid developing countries using orbital imagery. Part 7: Bibliography
There are no author-identified significant results in this report
A methodology for small scale rural land use mapping in semi-arid developing countries using orbital imagery. Part 4: Review of land use surveys using orbital imagery outside of the USA
The author has identified the following significant results. Outside the U.S., various attempts were made to investigate the feasibility of utilizing orbital MSS imagery in the production of small scale land use maps. Overall, these studies are not as elaborate or extensive in their scope as the U.S. ones, and generally the non-U.S. investigators have employed nonsophisticated and less expensive techniques. A representative range of studies is presented to demonstrate the approaches and trends dealing with reprocessing, interpretation, classification, sampling, and ground truth procedures
A methodology for small scale rural land use mapping in semi-arid developing countries using orbital imagery. 1: Introduction
The author has identified the following significant results. This research program has developed a viable methodology for producing small scale rural land use maps in semi-arid developing countries using imagery obtained from orbital multispectral scanners
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